Article ID: CBB055115839

From Monsters to Malformations: Anatomical Preparations as Objects of Evidence for a Developmental Paradigm of Embryology, 1770–1850 (2022)

unapi

A common object found within medical museums is the developmental series: an arrangement of embryos depicting the transformation of an unremarkable blob into an anatomically organized and recognizable organism. The developmental series depicts a normative process, one where bodies emerge in reliable sequential stages to reveal anatomically perfect beings. Yet a century before the developmental series would become a visual model of embryological development, the very process of development itself was discerned through the comparative study of preserved human fetuses—specifically, those deemed “monstrous” or characterized as “malformations.” This article examines how anatomically diverse fetal bodies were reformulated from singular curiosities into alternative developmental pathways whose characteristics testified to the laws of nature and to the primordial, physical relationship between humans and other species. In early nineteenth century Amsterdam, the father-son team of physicians Gerard and Willem Vrolik built up an internationally renowned anatomical museum famous especially for Willem’s collection of fetal malformations. Physical preparations of fetal malformations play a central role in Willem’s monumental handbook on developmental embryology: comparing human embryos against one another and the embryos of other species, Willem plots out a sequence of embryological development in which a body’s form marks its place within the ever-unfolding natural order. In conversation with the literature on model organisms, this article explores how the “monstrous” gets standardized and, in doing so, contributes to the scientific production of a normative physiological process.

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Article Brad Bolman (2022) Introduction: What Right? Which Organisms? Why Jobs?. Journal of the History of Biology (pp. 3-13). unapi

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Authors & Contributors
Bate, Jason
Bamji, Andrew
Mascha Hansen
Mossman, Craddock
Fletcher, Hannah
Whiteley, Rebecca
Journals
Social History of Medicine
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
Museum History Journal
Mariner's Mirror
HOST: Journal of History of Science and Technology
Histoire des Sciences Médicales
Publishers
Helion & Company
University of Cambridge (United Kingdom)
Vossiuspers UvA - Amsterdam University Press
University of Michigan Press
University of Illinois Press
Reaktion Books
Concepts
Specimens
Fetus
Disfigurement
Disabilities; disability; accessibility
Obstetrics and pregnancy
Collections
People
Harold Gillies
Charlotte, Queen of Great Britain
Saxtorph, Matthias
Seppings, Robert
William May
Worm, Ole
Time Periods
19th century
18th century
17th century
20th century, early
20th century
16th century
Places
Amsterdam (Netherlands)
England
France
Great Britain
Netherlands
Denmark
Institutions
East India Company (English)
Universiteit van Amsterdam
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